D.O.C. (Death of the Chorus) with Emily Warren
Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio
D.O.C. (Death of the Chorus) with Emily Warren
EPISODE 201
Listen to Top 40 pop over the last decade and you’ll notice something weird is happening. The chorus—the emotional apotheosis of a pop song, its dizzying high, its cathartic sing-along center—is disappearing. In its place, artists from Bad Bunny to Taylor Swift are toying with new, chorus-lite song forms that introduce a new musical grammar to the sound of contemporary pop. We may not think much about pop structure when listening to our favorite songs, but this is a big deal—the last time pop experienced such a seismic shift was when the chorus first came into fashion, back in the 1960s. What does this mean for modern musicians and listeners? Emily Warren, songwriter for new-guard stars like Dua Lipa and Khalid, joins to break down why the sea change in pop form represents a new horizon of creative possibility.
Songs Discussed
Bad Bunny - Si Veo a Tu Mamá
Future & Drake - Life Is Good
Billie Holiday - Blue Moon
Beyonce - Formation
Travis Scott - Sicko Mode
Queen - Bohemian Rhapsody
Aretha Franklin - (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
Drake - Laugh Now Cry Later (ft. Lil Durk)